Conservative Kevin
DeAnna goes incognito to a Campus Progress conference:
The Young Democratic Socialists handed out a flyer
featuring Martin Luther King stating, "We are saying that something
is wrong with capitalism, there must be a better distribution of
wealth and maybe America must move toward a democratic socialism"
-- which would shock my movement colleagues who tell me every
January that MLK was a conservative Republican. . . . The tendency
of attendees to speak of overthrowing the "system" and in the next
sentence talking about the upcoming Obama Administration is exactly
how activists should think. . . . They understand that the role of
activists is to push politicians towards an independently defined
agenda rather than serving as cannon fodder. Hence, a common
concern of many activists was how to avoid being "co-opted" by the
Democratic establishment -- even if that establishment is headed by
the most liberal candidate in American history. Similarly, a
comment during the civil rights panel about how any movement needs
a "militant resistance" was met not with nervous glances but
agreement to what all perceived to be an obvious
point.
DeAnna perceives among young conservatives too much of a
careerist focus, which tends to work against independent activism.
He concludes that young conservative activists have more to learn
from the Left than vice-versa.
(Cross-posted at The
Other McCain.)
topics:
Socialism